Coptic Bishop: Egypt’s Christians Attacked ‘Every Two or Three Days’

After the latest round of attacks on Egypt’s Christian minority—which saw at least one Copt stabbed to death and many Christian homes and a church burned—Coptic Bishop Makarious of al-Minya, the region where many of the attacks on Christians take place, was interviewed on television. Although Church authorities in Egypt are regularly diplomatic and sensitive to what they say—more elements in Egypt, including in the government, can seek “retribution” if Christians openly complain and make them look bad—Makarious made many revealing comments.

Bishop Makarious (center) stands with 70-year-old Christian woman who in an earlier attack was stripped naked, beat, and paraded in front of 300 jeering Muslims.

Although only Christians, no Muslims, were killed and hurt, he wondered why the government and media continue to describe these incidents as “clashes”—which suggests two quarrelling parties—when the reality is always that one side attacks the other: “Within minutes [of the start of one of the attacks], 100 Muslims instantly appeared, fully armed, as if ready for war.”

His grandest point was that the attackers know that they will never be punished, so they continue to grow more and more emboldened:

As long as the attackers are never punished, and the armed forces are portrayed as doing their duty, this will just encourage others to continue the attacks, since, even if they are arrested, they will be quickly released.

When the host asked questions about who is released and why, suggesting that perhaps those released are in fact innocent of any wrongdoing against the Christians, the bishop replied:

Well what do you think when the actual attackers themselves are arrested, with complete proofs and evidences against them, but then they are still declared innocent and released?… this happens every single time.

When asked what the government did regarding this incident, he said it did what it always does: taking its time, “security comes after all the damage is complete, after the rioters have had their fill of plunder, then it stays in the area for a couple days, and once it leaves, the area again falls under the sway of certain elements.”

Bishop Makarious ultimately held the government responsible for the repeated attacks on the Coptic Christians of Minya. After he pointed out that “some of the authorities always smile at what is happening,” the surprised host asked him to explain, to which the bishop responded: “Of course I don’t assume that all authorities have the interest of the nation at heart and are sincere, because if they did, these attacks would not happen time and again, at a rate now of every two or three days.”

Does anyone see anything wrong with celebrating “the assumption” of a dead woman, no longer a virgin, who was conceived in sin and born in corruption just like every other human being since Adam whose body is in the earth awaiting the rapture or the first resurrection? Does anyone see anything wrong with praying to a dead woman, worshiping a dead woman, making statues of a dead woman and giving this woman attributes that belong only to G-d?

Rony Deldar

I don’t understand why previous commentator wrote all these. Faith is beside the point (attempting to justify..). If these accounts are remotely true, they should at once try to find any sort of logical/empirical evidence (however flimsy that might be) which allow them to treat all citizens equally and prosecute the ringleaders who instigate this sort of sentiment with exemplary punishment.

It’s absolutely astonishing that a Al-Azhar University whose main purpose has been to study religion failed to come up with any solution for …1ooo years!!!

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